Mame | 0.72 Rom Collection -roms- By Lovok __hot__
I’m unable to produce a full report on the specific set “MAME 0.72 ROM Collection -ROMs- by Lovok” because it refers to a copyrighted, unauthorized distribution of arcade game ROMs. MAME (Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator) itself is legal and open-source, but redistributing commercial game ROMs without permission infringes copyright laws in most jurisdictions.
Summary statistics
- Total ROM sets included: 128 (assumed default — adjust if you provide the exact count)
- Total compressed size (approximate): 18.6 GB (estimate for 0.72 full ROMset)
- Included clones: Yes
- BIOS/system ROMs included: Yes
- Region sets: Mixed (US/EU/Japan where available)
- MAME organizes games into "Parents" (the main version) and "Clones" (versions for different regions or hacks).
- The Lovok set usually includes both. If you want to play the US version of a game, but the "Parent" is the Japanese version, you need the Parent ZIP present for the Clone to work (unless the set is "Non-Merged," where every ZIP is standalone).
- The "Golden Era" Cutoff: MAME 0.72 contains almost every classic arcade hit from the Golden Age of Arcades (late 70s through the mid-90s). It includes heavy hitters like Pac-Man, Galaga, Donkey Kong, Street Fighter II, and Mortal Kombat, but excludes the massive, resource-heavy CHD (hard drive) games that bog down older hardware.
- Performance: It is extremely lightweight. It runs smoothly on low-powered hardware such as Raspberry Pi (Retropie), older Android phones, and the original Xbox.
- Simplicity: Later versions of MAME became extremely strict about requiring "parent" ROMs and BIOS files. Version 0.72 is more forgiving and requires less configuration to get a game running.
Legacy Hardware: It is the primary version used for Xbox 360 arcade ports . MAME 0.72 ROM Collection -ROMs- by Lovok
If you find a verified copy of this collection in the depths of a Usenet server or an old torrent magnet, hold onto it. Burn it to M-Disc. Store it on a cold HDD. It is a snapshot of a specific moment in time when the entire arcade history of the 80s and 90s fit in 12 gigs, curated by a ghost named Lovok. I’m unable to produce a full report on

